While her family were grateful for the NHS care Amelia was receiving, they felt her progress had begun to plateau. And, as Amelia approached school age, they were keen to help her become more independent. So, they decided to look for additional treatment, which is when they got in touch with LOC.
They met with our clinician, Sam Walmsley, who was confident that he and the rest of the LOC team could help Amelia. But, there was a problem. Taking the private route meant finding the £3,000 required for a year-long programme of treatment, including AFOs, physio and regular check-ups. Determined to do the best for his daughter, Paulo set up an online fundraising page and, through the generosity of friends and strangers, Amelia began her treatment with Sam when she was five.
“Amelia’s was an interesting case,” Sam explains, “because when she walked, her knees flexed too much, particularly on her good side. This actually gave the appearance that her left side was damaged, when, in fact, her more effective side was swinging the leg through, causing the hamstring to catch. This, in turn, pulled her pelvis round, affecting the good leg and meant she didn’t have the stability to hold up her left leg.”
To correct this, Sam says: “We had to equalise her leg lengths, get her balanced, but then also make her good side more stable than her affected side to try to help her stretch out the hamstring on the bad side. It’s quite complicated to work it all out and her AFO prescription looks all back to front, but she’s actually walking very nicely now.”
Amelia found the treatment quite difficult at first because, according to Sam, “we’re challenging her to keep her knee straight and get the affected side through without her knee on the good side collapsing.” But the effort has been worth it, as Paulo explains: “Since she’s had the new AFOs, Amelia’s walking has become straighter. She’s started putting the correct pressure on her feet and her balance has improved quite a lot.”